The most relevant information I see on this is Google's comment that future claims about past events will not be subject to binding arbitration. That implies that the special circumstance which will be different going forwards is not about underlying events, but about the actual current status of the claims.
If the announcement set Day 0 based on the date of the claimed harassment, that would be extremely suspicious, and I think the most natural reading would be some specific issue that's been resolved, but could produce exceptional damages. With a date-of-claim threshold, that seems much less likely; any kind of serial misbehavior or other mishandling that Google expects to avoid in the future could still create liability via claims not yet filed.
A few legally-inclined people elsewhere in the comments have pointed out that "adding the option to leave arbitration" behaves differently than "not forcing arbitration to begin with". Most non-forced arbitration is still binding, which means that neither party can start arbitration and then pursue a lawsuit after seeing the result. Opening a one-time option to leave ongoing arbitration would be much more similar to entering non-binding arbitration, a move lawyers frequently counsel against.
The proceedings of non-binding arbitration are almost never admissible in subsequent court cases, and the process lacks formal discovery. As a result, there are unpleasant tactics like entering non-binding arbitration, obtaining useful information (e.g. someone's schedule, or information of who knew about a behavior), and then pursuing a lawsuit with added or altered claims based on that information.
> Google is easily the most morally dubious company out there.
I mean, I might have put some tobacco, arms, oil, coal, chemical, and surveillance companies up there. Particularly since I don't see them leading the way on harassment, inequity, diversity, or any of the other things Google is being criticized for. It sort of seems as though they have all the same issues plus body counts. But perhaps I've missed the news, are Gazprom and Saudi Aramco famous for how well they handle sexual harassment claims?
Your point about corporate ruthlessness is a solid one, but putting Google at the head of that list seriously undersells the problem. It's worth remembering how bad things are, and how bad they can get.
Hell, now that I'm thinking of it, I'd put Chiquita higher up on the list than Google. They never actually got over the bad old days in Honduras, they were caught funding and directly arming Colombian terrorists in 2004.
I did use the word "dubious" on purpose. There are certainly more strictly evil companies out there, but the moral ground Google operates on is the definition of Dubious. Its shaky and doubtful. They're self-righteous about their morality, dating back to their classic motto "Don't Be Evil", but startlingly few of their actions, especially those directly related to their products, ever feel in line with this now tossed-aside motto. In other words, they're managed by a handful of children with Computer Science degrees and relentless ambition; the moment something goes wrong they throw up their hands and yell "we're solving problems no one else has attempted" without any introspection that maybe the problem wouldn't even exist if they didn't.
But that's not really an option for any company. So they continue on.
If the announcement set Day 0 based on the date of the claimed harassment, that would be extremely suspicious, and I think the most natural reading would be some specific issue that's been resolved, but could produce exceptional damages. With a date-of-claim threshold, that seems much less likely; any kind of serial misbehavior or other mishandling that Google expects to avoid in the future could still create liability via claims not yet filed.
A few legally-inclined people elsewhere in the comments have pointed out that "adding the option to leave arbitration" behaves differently than "not forcing arbitration to begin with". Most non-forced arbitration is still binding, which means that neither party can start arbitration and then pursue a lawsuit after seeing the result. Opening a one-time option to leave ongoing arbitration would be much more similar to entering non-binding arbitration, a move lawyers frequently counsel against.
The proceedings of non-binding arbitration are almost never admissible in subsequent court cases, and the process lacks formal discovery. As a result, there are unpleasant tactics like entering non-binding arbitration, obtaining useful information (e.g. someone's schedule, or information of who knew about a behavior), and then pursuing a lawsuit with added or altered claims based on that information.